Reviews and Problems with Motorola DROID RAZR MAXX

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Overall 8

Motorola RAZR MAXX Review: In Depth

Recombu

28 March 2014

Conclusion: The Motorola RAZR MAXX is virtually the same phone as the Motorola RAZR released towards the end of last year, only now it has a fantastic battery and an even more out of date OS. The phone may not look amazing, however delivers solid performance across the board without too much girth. The battery life truly is worth shouting about, lasting at least two days, so if you can handle Gingerbread and excess fascia, we can confidently recommend you snap one up.

Pros: Best battery life on offer, Innovative pre-loaded apps, Great connectivity

Review: Motorola Droid Razr Maxx

Wired

21 August 2012

Excerpt: Any lasting relationship isn’t reliant on looks alone. Sure, it starts with lust. But we get older, slower. We grow love handles and extra chins. But we stay together because, ultimately, the connection is based on something deeper than the superficial.

Pros: So much POWER. Fantastic build quality, even if it’s bulkier than the first Droid Razr. Smart Actions boost battery life even further.

Cons: 0 price tag is wince-worthy. It’s, uh, kinda huge. Non-HD screen is a bummer, considering all the juice there to power it.

Motorola Droid Razr Maxx Review

Digitaltrends

15 February 2012

Conclusion: With double the battery life of the Razr and a much improved camera, the Maxx is one of the best smartphones on the market. It has a dual-core processor, 4G LTE connection, Super AMOLED screen, great battery life, and it’s still one of the thinnest phones on the market. Though we still prefer the Android 4.0 operating system on the Galaxy Nexus, Motorola promises that Maxx owners will get it by mid-2012. As they say, good things come to those who wait.

The Droid RAZR gets a little thicker and a lot longer-lasting

theverge.com

9 February 2012

Summary: by encouraging buyers to pass and wait for the Nexus, which offered a bigger, better screen and Android 4.0. That recommendation has been more than validated since the Nexus has been released — there’s no way you should buy a Droid RAZR over a Galaxy Nexus.

Motorola Droid RAZR MAXX

MobileTechReview.com

1 February 2012

Conclusion: It's sexy, it's unique and nearly bulletproof thanks to Gorilla Glass on the front and Kevlar on the back. Voice quality is excellent, download speeds on LTE rock and the phone has supreme battery life. The Super AMOLED display is very colorful with deep blacks, though it's not the highest resolution display on the block. The Droid RAZR MAXX works with Motorola's myriad accessories including the Lapdock, giving it an element of versatility.

Expert Review

Phone Arena

30 January 2012

Conclusion: If you are a power user and are sick of continually charging your battery, you should take a look at the Motorola DROID RAZR MAXX. Its talk and standby times are the longest that we've seen on a smartphone, and the device has plenty of high-end features to quench an Android user’s thirst, with its only drawbacks being the non-HD screen and the mediocre camera quality.

Pros: Long lasting battery, Good design and materials used

Cons: Still waiting on Ice Cream Sandwich, Display is not HD quality, Camera and camcorder are not top-notch

Motorola Droid RAZR Maxx (Verizon Wireless) Review

LAPTOP Magazine

30 January 2012

Summary: The $299 Droid RAZR Maxx represents an impressive feat of engineering. Motorola managed to cram a high-capacity battery inside a design that's thinner than most 4G LTE phones, enabling it to last more than twice as long on a charge as competing devices like the Samsung Galaxy Nexus (with its standard battery) and LG Spectrum . And although the Maxx is a little large, we appreciate its durability.